Officers in Santa Cruz police shooting called heroic

Details into detective deaths also released

The actions of four officers who fatally shot a man suspected of killing two Santa Cruz police detectives were heroic, authorities said Thursday.

Police Chief Kevin Vogel said the officers who surrounded Jeremy Goulet risked their own safety to protect others.

"(The officers) walked through the gates of hell. All their actions cannot be overstated. They truly saved more lives," Vogel told reporters during a news conference, according to the Santa Cruz Sentinel.

New details into the deaths of Detective Sgt. Loran "Butch" Baker and Detective Elizabeth Butler were also released. The detectives were investigating Goulet's role in an alleged sexual assault when they were shot and killed Feb. 26.

Santa Cruz County Sheriff Phil Wowak said Goulet fired nine shots at the plainclothes detectives at his doorstep after they spoke to him through the door of his house and said he was being arrested.

Goulet appeared from a second entrance of the house and fired five shots at the officers within seconds, Wowak said. Three of his bullets disabled the officers, who dropped their weapons, the sheriff added.

Goulet then walked up to Baker and fired two more rounds into him, then fired two rounds into Butler.

"He already had incapacitated them. It was unnecessary," Deputy April Skalland told reporters. "They had no chance."

Goulet took the detectives' guns and fled in Baker's unmarked car, donning the sergeant's bulletproof vest. Authorities say what Goulet did for several minutes is unclear, but he returned to the scene because within minutes.

A group of officers who had been administering aid to the fallen detectives - sheriff's Sgt. Stefan Fish, and Santa Cruz police Sgt. Jose Garcia and officers Barnaby Clark and Tim Shields - spotted Goulet in an alley behind his house.

"They said, 'Show me your hands,' but he wouldn't comply. That's when he takes off down the alley, maybe to lead them into another ambush," Skalland said. "We believed he was there to shoot and kill more officers."

The officers fired 54 shots at Goulet and he had returned fire 15 times, authorities said.

Goulet had with him a plane ticket to New Mexico, where he had relatives. He planned to leave four days after the shooting, less than a week after he'd been fired from his job at a coffee shop. A co-worker had accused him of making inappropriate sexual advances at her home.